Beemaster's International Beekeeping Forum

BEEKEEPING LEARNING CENTER => DISEASE & PEST CONTROL => Topic started by: FatherMichael on May 29, 2019, 06:42:15 pm

Title: Oxalic Drip?
Post by: FatherMichael on May 29, 2019, 06:42:15 pm
Can someone explain how bees ingesting oxalic acid in a syrup drip kills mites?
Title: Re: Oxalic Drip?
Post by: AR Beekeeper on May 31, 2019, 08:07:09 am
The purpose of mixing the oxalic acid in thin sugar syrup is to make a sticky solution that will adhere to the bees bodies and not just run off as water does.  The acid then will contact the mites and be absorbed/burn them, I am not sure which, or if it is both, killing the mites.  The reason thin syrup is used is so the solution will be bitter and the bees will not eat it.

Go to YouTube and search for the Oxalic Acid Drench video featuring Marion Ellis for information on the why and how of using oxalic acid for varroa mites.
Title: Re: Oxalic Drip?
Post by: Michael Bush on June 03, 2019, 11:06:21 am
No one seems sure why oxalic acid kills mites at all.  Both vapor and syrup are a mystery.  There are, of course, theories.
Title: Re: Oxalic Drip?
Post by: FatherMichael on June 20, 2019, 03:42:56 pm
Go to YouTube and search for the Oxalic Acid Drench video featuring Marion Ellis for information on the why and how of using oxalic acid for varroa mites.

Good video!

The treatment is spread by contact, which is the principle behind the oxalic/glycerin shop cloth method.